For reasons that I have never fully grasped, Angels fans have a unique way of glomming onto an unheralded reserve outfielder and turning him into something of a cult hero among the fan base. The newest entry into this long lineage is non-prospect-first-baseman-turned-reserve-outfielder-fan-favorite (sorry, internet, I think I just used up the entire supply of hyphens), Efren Navarro.
Why has Efren captured the hearts of fans? I don’t really know. I don’t even know why predecessors like J.B. Shuck and Orlando Palmeiro have been so popular. That really leaves me no choice but to investigate.
J.B. Shuck
Distinguishing characteristics:
- Never a top prospect
- Undersized (not really, he’s 5’11 and 195 pounds, but people think he is undersized)
- Fast (sort of, he doesn’t really steal bases)
- Gritty
- White
- Goofy name (so many fun things rhyme with Shuck!)
- Made highlight reel catch (sort of, it was overrated, but it covered up the fact that he’s a terrible defensive outfielder)
- Good rookie season
Reggie Willits
Distinguishing characteristics:
- Never a top prospect
- Homegrown talent
- Undersized
- Fast
- Gritty
- White
- Ridiculous lip snarl while at-bat, despite being the opposite of intimidating due to his total lack of power
- High socks
- Literally lived in a batting cage
- Goofy name (on name alone, everyone assumed he was black until he got called up and everyone saw him)
- Good rookie season
Tommy Murphy
Distinguishing characteristics:
- Never a top prospect (sort of, he was a third round pick)
- Homegrown talent
- Small-ish
- Fast
- Gritty
- White
- High socks
- Fun nickname (“Happy,” at least according to Rex Hudler)
Jeff DaVanon
Distinguishing characteristics:
- Never a top prospect
- Fast
- Gritty
- White
- Wore a double-earflap helmet
- High socks
- Kind of DERPy
- Hit three homers in a game
- Good rookie season
Orlando Palmeiro
Distinguishing characteristics:
- Never a top prospect
- Homegrown talent
- Undersized
- Fast-ish
- Gritty
- Fun name (Orlando is unique and it rhymes well with Palmeiro)
- 80-grade DADHAT
- Good rookie season
The list goes on and on, but that at least covers the entirety of the 21st century. Compiling the results, far it seems that to be a cult hero outfielder one must tick off most of the following checkboxes:
- Never a top prospect
- Homegrown talent
- Undersized
- Fast
- White
- Gritty
- Goofy name or nickname
- Quirky appearance or personality
- Good rookie season
- One or more memorable highlight/achievement
So where does Efren fit into this?
- Never a top prospect? CHECK! 50th round draft pick.
- Homegrown talent? CHECK!
- Undersized? NOPE.
- Fast? NOPE. Not even a little bit.
- White? NOPE. But he is Mexican, which is almost as good for the Southern California fanbase.
- Gritty? CHECK! Probably. This is non-quantifiable and based entirely on media narrative.
- Goofy name or nickname? CHECK! C’mon, his name is “Efren.”
- Quirky appearance or personality? NOPE.
- At least one good season? INCOMPLETE. But so far so good.
- One or more memorable highlight/achievement? CHECK! Two game-winning hits in one week. I’m not sure if those memories will hold up long-term, but they are good enough for now.
So Efren meets six of the ten requirements. That’s a “D” average and that’s good enough for Angels fans. Welcome to the Cult Hero Outfielder Club, Efren! May your membership last longer than Tommy Murphy’s.
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